NEWS HEADLINES: The Best Mathematical Breakdown Of The “Man of Steel” Theory I Have Seen * 100PercentFedUp.com * by Noah

The Best Mathematical Breakdown Of The “Man of Steel” Theory I Have Seen * 100PercentFedUp.com * by Noah

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Earlier tonight, I brought you the stunning report that Charlie Kirk had no exist would because he has “super bones”.

That a rough paraphrase, but the full report was here in case you missed it:

“Man of Steel”: Coroner Says No Exit Wound Because Bullet Stopped By Charlie Kirk’s Incredibly “Healthy and Dense” Bones

Now I want to advance the story because this is the best analysis I have seen so far.

All credit to Mike Adams for this one, who I believe addressed this very respectfully but also scientifically and mathematically.

Here is Mike’s analysis of the “Superman” claims:

NARRATIVE-BUSTING FACTS: A .30-06 rifle round produces around 3,000+ foot-pounds of energy when fired. (With some loads, it’s even higher.)

This amount of energy can lift a 3,000-lb. object one foot high (hence the name of the unit).

The diameter of a .30-06 Springfield bullet is .308 inches (7.82 mm).

This means the actual area of the skin that is struck by the bullet is 0.0745 square inches (pi formula, remember?).

So a .30-06 rifle round delivers 3,000 foot-pounds of energy (or slightly less, as it slows very slightly after leaving the barrel) to an area of human skin that is 0.0745 square inches in total area, which is about the diameter of your pinky finger.

There is no bone in the human body that can survive 3,000 foot-pounds of energy directed into such a small area. Only Wolverine could survive it, but he’s not real.

Anyone who thinks that neck skin, tissue or even bones can stop and absorb such a large amount of energy moving through such a tiny area of tissue is truly delusional. Yet this is now what we’re being told by the same people who claim we should also believe the lone shooter theory.

IMPORTANT: If his neck absorbed 3,000 foot-pounds of energy, the energy had to have gone somewhere. Newton’s laws of motion, duh. High school science. Where did the energy go? Kinetic energy doesn’t just vanish because you wish it away. Low-IQ narrative swallowers failed high school physics.

3,000 foot-pounds of energy is enough to hurl a person the size of Charlie 15 feet into the air, assuming the pressure were applied evenly across his entire body (and assuming he weighed around 200 pounds).

That didn’t happen. The energy vanished. And we’re told his neck stopped 3,000 foot-pounds of energy because Charlie was “healthy.”

There are no doubt a whole bunch of orthopedic surgeons losing their s–t over this claim right now. They know what bones can sustain… and what they can’t. No human neck stops a .30-06 round and absorbs all its energy with no exit wound. Never happened, never will. The physics and anatomy make it impossible. Nobody is Wolverine, and Charlie isn’t Superman (with all due apologies for mixing DC and Marvel universes).

The math ain’t mathin, in other words.

As I said, very respectful and very well-reasoned analysis.

And don’t tell me “now is not the time”.

Now is absolutely the time!

Sorry but waiting days or weeks to be told we’re now allowed to talk about this is complete nonsense.

Charlie would not have wanted that.

Charlie was a truth-seeker, and truth-seeking is all anyone is interested right now in this discussion.

My take?

I’m happy to just chalk it up to a complete “miracle” because miracles DO happen today and by definition they often defy the laws of our Universe.

My full report:

“Man of Steel”: Coroner Says No Exit Wound Because Bullet Stopped By Charlie Kirk’s Incredibly “Healthy and Dense” Bones

Ok folks, you might find this a bit hard to believe (and I’ll give my thoughts below) but first let me report the absolutely stunning news breaking this evening…

According to Charlie Kirk’s surgeon, the reason there is no exit wound is because Charlie had incredibly healthy and dense bones that stopped the bullet from traveling through and exiting.

And according to his Coroner, the bullet was indeed found “just under the skin” — although it’s unclear if that is just under the front skin or the back skin, but presumably the front.

It is being called a true miracle.

Fox News is calling him the (literal) Man of Steel:

These new details come to us from his producer Andrew Kolvet, who posted this:

I want to address some of the discussion about the lack of an exit wound with Charlie. I’m usually not interested in delving into most of this kind of online chatter, and I apologize this is somewhat graphic, but in this case, the fact that there wasn’t an exit wound is probably another miracle, and I want people to know.

I just spoke with the surgeon who worked on Charlie in the hospital…

He said the bullet “absolutely should have gone through, which is very very normal for a high powered, high velocity round. I’ve seen wounds from this caliber many times and they always just go through everything. This would have taken a moose or two down, an elk, etc.”

But it didn’t go through. Charlie’s body stopped it.

I mentioned to his doctor that there were dozens of staff, students, and special guests standing directly behind Charlie on the other side of the tent, and he replied:

“It was an absolute miracle that someone else didn’t get killed.”

“His bone was so healthy and the density was so so impressive that he’s like the man of steel. It should have just gone through and through. It likely would have killed those standing behind him too.”

In the end, the coroner did find the bullet just beneath the skin.

Even in death, Charlie managed to save the lives of those around him.

Remarkable. Miraculous.

Alex Jones is not convinced:

Neither is Mike Adams:

And I’ll give you my opinion in just a moment, but first let’s keep reporting on the facts.

I turned to ChatGPT to see what is “possible” and what is “likely” in these circumstances.

The answer might surprise you!

First of all, ChatGPT confirms that in “most cases” a 30-06 shot even at a Deer would pass completely through the deer and leave a large exit wound:

So…is Charlie’s neck more powerful than a deer?

Maybe!

I didn’t stop there, I continued with a few follow up questions that might shed a lot more light on this.

Next question:

Is there any feasible concept whereby a 30-06 would hit a human neck from 200 yards out and not leave an exit wound out the other side?

ANSWER:

Energy and Range

  • A .30-06 Springfield round fired from 200 yards still carries a tremendous amount of energy — usually well over 2,000 foot-pounds, depending on the bullet type.

  • That’s far more than is needed to penetrate the human body, including the neck region.


Factors That Could Prevent an Exit Wound

While most .30-06 hits would exit, there are feasible scenarios where it might not:

  1. Bullet Type / Construction

    • Rapid-expansion bullets (e.g., ballistic tip or thin-jacketed soft points) can fragment violently on impact.

    • If the bullet hits bone (like a vertebra) and breaks up, much of its energy could be dumped inside, leaving no intact projectile to exit.

  2. Angle of Entry

    • If the bullet enters at a steep angle, it could travel lengthwise through more tissue and bone, increasing resistance.

    • A sideways path along the spine or jawline could absorb more energy than a straight cross-neck shot.

  3. Tumbling / Yaw

    • If the bullet destabilizes (starts tumbling), it may fragment or expand erratically, again dumping energy inside rather than punching through.

  4. Barrier or Intermediate Object

    • If the bullet first passed through something else (glass, wall, heavy clothing, gear) before hitting, it could deform, fragment, or lose energy — reducing penetration.


Forensic Expectation

  • Typical outcome: A .30-06 round striking the human neck at 200 yards would almost always create an exit wound, given the caliber’s power.

  • Possible exceptions: Fragmentation on bone, steep travel path through dense structures, or prior deformation could lead to a retained bullet or bullet fragments with no clear exit wound.

Next question:

Is there any feasible situation whereby under those terms the bullet would be found “just under the skin” by the coroner?

ANSWER:

Yes — that is a feasible forensic outcome, even with a .30-06.

Normally, a high-powered rifle round at 200 yards would pass straight through. But under some specific conditions, it’s possible for the bullet (or a large fragment) to end up lodged just under the skin on the far side, without creating a full exit wound:


Situations That Could Cause a Subcutaneous Lodging

  1. Energy Dissipation on Bone

    • If the bullet strikes a dense structure like a cervical vertebra or jawbone, it may shatter or mushroom, losing much of its velocity.

    • After traversing soft tissue, the slowed bullet might “tent” the skin on the exit side but not break through, stopping just under the skin.

  2. Bullet Expansion or Fragmentation

  3. Shallow Angle of Travel

    • If the bullet travels lengthwise (say, entering at the base of the neck and coursing upward or diagonally), it may expend its energy across a long tissue path.

    • By the time it reaches the far side, only a fragment or deformed slug remains, with too little energy to break through.

  4. Elasticity of Skin

    • Human skin is surprisingly tough and elastic.

    • A bullet that has slowed dramatically may “push” the skin outward (creating a raised bulge) without puncturing it, where a coroner later finds it lodged just beneath.

  5. Intermediate Barrier Before Entry

    • If the bullet first passes through glass, wallboard, or other material, it could deform or yaw badly.

    • The reduced velocity plus irregular shape might cause it to lodge subcutaneously after impact.


Forensic Expectation

Coroners sometimes find bullets or large fragments just under the skin on the far side of a wound channel, especially when the projectile has lost energy through bone impacts or fragmentation.
It’s unusual for a .30-06 at 200 yards, but not impossible — especially if:

  • the bullet is designed for rapid expansion,

  • it hits heavy bone,

  • and the trajectory forces it through a long tissue path.


In short: Yes, it’s feasible for a .30-06 bullet to be found “just under the skin” rather than exiting, though it would be considered the exception rather than the rule.

And now the grand finale….possible, but how likely?

Final question:

Give that a % likelihood of happening

ANSWER:

Good question — but it’s important to frame this carefully. With wound ballistics, there’s no precise, peer-reviewed statistic for “likelihood of lodging just under the skin” for a .30-06 round, because every variable (bullet design, angle, tissue, barriers) changes the result. That said, we can give a reasoned probability range.


Baseline Expectation

  • At 200 yards, a .30-06 still has well over 2,000 ft-lbs of energy.

  • A deer’s chest is 8–12″ thick; humans are comparable in neck depth only a few inches.

  • Normally, this results in a through-and-through exit wound nearly every time.


Factors Reducing Exit Likelihood

  • Bone hit with major expansion/fragmentation: slows the bullet dramatically.

  • Long, angled wound path: uses up more energy.

  • Fragile bullet construction: can break up, leaving fragments instead of a clean exit.

  • Intermediate barrier: reduces velocity before impact.


Reasoned Likelihood Estimate

  • Through-and-through exit wound: ~90–95% of cases.

  • Bullet lodging inside the body (but not just under the skin): ~5–9%.

  • Bullet making it all the way to the far side but stopping just under the skin: rare, about 1–3% likelihood under typical conditions.


So: it’s possible but uncommon. A coroner finding a .30-06 round just under the skin of the neck would be considered a low-probability, unusual outcome, but it’s not outside the realm of forensic plausibility.

So the final answer according to ChatGPT?

Very unlikely in 90-95% of cases, but POSSIBLE and not completely infeasible to imagine in up to 10% of cases.

My take?

I find it about 90% hard to believe, but not impossible.

And that is nearing “miracle” territory, and I am completely HAPPY to believe a miracle here.

I’m not saying I am ready to just buy the official story hook, line and sinker, but I do leave open the possibility of a miracle here and I would be happy for that to be the outcome.

How about you?

His legacy certainly lives on, even more-so now in death.

This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport.

View the original article here.





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